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"An entertaining and provocative look at Hollywood's depiction of Native Americans, Reel Injun journeys through a century of cinema to set the record straight. Traveling through the heartland of the U.S., to the Black Hills and Monument Valley, Cree filmmaker Neil Diamond examines how the myth of the movie "Injun" has influenced the world's understanding -- and misunderstanding -- of Natives. With clips from hundreds of classic and recent films document the shift from nuanced silent-era heroes to the Western's "noble savage" stereotype, leading up to the bourgeoning Native independent scene of Smoke Signals and The Fast Runner. Containing candid interviews with celebrated directors, writers, actors and activists, including Clint Eastwood, Robbie Robertson, Sacheen Littlefeather, John Trudell, and Russell Means, Reel Injun is an insightful and essential compendium for understanding the racial politics of Hollywood and the continuing artistic vibrancy of Native peoples." -- Back of container.Read more...

Abstract:

"An entertaining and provocative look at Hollywood's depiction of Native Americans, Reel Injun journeys through a century of cinema to set the record straight. Traveling through the heartland of the U.S., to the Black Hills and Monument Valley, Cree filmmaker Neil Diamond examines how the myth of the movie "Injun" has influenced the world's understanding -- and misunderstanding -- of Natives. With clips from hundreds of classic and recent films document the shift from nuanced silent-era heroes to the Western's "noble savage" stereotype, leading up to the bourgeoning Native independent scene of Smoke Signals and The Fast Runner. Containing candid interviews with celebrated directors, writers, actors and activists, including Clint Eastwood, Robbie Robertson, Sacheen Littlefeather, John Trudell, and Russell Means, Reel Injun is an insightful and essential compendium for understanding the racial politics of Hollywood and the continuing artistic vibrancy of Native peoples." -- Back of container.

Reviews

This affectingly personal and richly informative documentary critically explores how Native Americans have been depicted in cinema over the past century as its creator, a Montreal-based aboriginal filmmaker, crisscrosses the United States in a dilapidated vehicleâdubbed a ârez carââto reach Hollywood,...Read more...

This affectingly personal and richly informative documentary critically explores how Native Americans have been depicted in cinema over the past century as its creator, a Montreal-based aboriginal filmmaker, crisscrosses the United States in a dilapidated vehicleâdubbed a ârez carââto reach Hollywood, the source of so much of the stereotyping, myth-making and distortion scrutinized throughout the film. En route to visiting historically important sites such as the Wounded Knee Memorial in South Dakota, Geronimoâs homeland in Arizona, and Monument Valley in Utah, director Neil Diamond features an enormous panoply of footage from the silent era of cinema to the present, interspersed with insightful and penetrating interviews featuring celebrities (musician Robbie Robertson), film critics, American Indian scholars, historians, activists (Russell Means, John Trudell, Sacheen Littlefeather), actors (Graham Greene, Dances with Wolves; Wes Studi, Last of the Mohicans; Adam Beach, Smoke Signals), and filmmakers (Jim Jarmusch, Dead Man; Chris Eyre, Smoke Signals; Clint Eastwood). Diamond also journeys to a remote Inuit hamlet in Northern Canada to conclude the production with what is perhaps its most powerful interview, with the director of the internationally acclaimed 2001 movie The Fast Runner, the first full-length film in the Inuktitut language.

Through his personal narration and arrangement of interviews, Diamond skillfully sustains an engagingly dynamic tone throughout the film, aptly punctuating the overriding good humor with poignant moments of plaintiveness, indignation and exasperation at the many distortive portrayals of Native Americans in cinema and television, and at the lingering manifestations in contemporary American culture of the continuing influence of those depictions.
Highly recommended for all academic and public libraries, particularly those serving interests in media studies, film studies, and Native American studies.